Book ID: CBB346943024

Ten Materials That Shaped Our World (2021)

unapi

This book examines ten materials—flint, clay, iron, gold, glass, cement, rubber, polyethylene, aluminum, and silicon—explaining how they formed, how we discovered them, why they have the properties they do, and how they have transformed our lives. Since the dawn of the Stone Age, we have shaped materials to meet our needs and, in turn, those materials have shaped us.The fracturing of flint created sharp, curved surfaces that gave our ancestors an evolutionary edge. Molding clay and then baking it in the sun produced a means of recording the written word and exemplified human artistic imagination. As our ability to control heat improved, earthenware became stoneware and eventually porcelain, the most prized ceramic of all. Iron cast at high temperatures formed the components needed for steam engines, locomotives, and power looms—the tools of the Industrial Revolution. Gold has captivated humans for thousands of years and has recently found important uses in biology, medicine, and nanotechnology. Glass shaped into early and imperfect lenses not only revealed the microscopic world of cells and crystals, but also allowed us to discover stars and planets beyond those visible with the naked eye. Silicon revolutionized the computer, propelling us into the Information Age and with it our interconnected social networks, the Internet of Things, and artificial intelligence.Written by a materials scientist, this book explores not just why, but also how certain materials came to be so fundamental to human society. This enlightening study captivates anyone interested in learning more about the history of humankind, our ingenuity, and the materials that have shaped our world.

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Citation URI
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Authors & Contributors
Misa, Thomas J.
Aurélie Cuénod
Willan, Claude
Robbins, Amy S.
Hanna Vikström
Bulstrode, Jenny
Journals
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Historical Archaeology
Technology and Culture
Sudhoffs Archiv: Zeitschrift fuer Wissenschaftsgeschichte
NTM: Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, Technik und Medizin
Journal of Design History
Publishers
Johns Hopkins University Press
State University of New York at Binghamton
The MIT Press
Stanford University Press
Quasar
Brill
Concepts
Material culture
Materials science
Technology and society
Metals and metallic compounds
Technology and culture
Ceramics; pottery
People
Sommerfeld, Arnold Johannes Wilhelm
Plot, Robert
Maxwell, James Clerk
Faraday, Michael
Cort, Henry
Time Periods
19th century
Ancient
Early modern
20th century, early
20th century
18th century
Places
Mediterranean region
Oxford (England)
Middle and Near East
Jamaica (Caribbean)
London (England)
Prussia (Germany)
Institutions
Corning Museum of Glass
Oxford University
Mount Holyoke College
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
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